The other night I watched "The Machinist" on Netflix. Prior to watching it I read some reviews on IMDB and some people called it a very depressing movie. I did not find it to be such but it got me thinking about the unequivocally most depressing movie I have ever seen, which was "The Road" with Viggo Mortensen. Don't know how many have seen this but I would advise staying away from pills or guns for at least 48 hrs after watching it.
What's the most depressing movie you've ever seen?

The other night I watched "The Machinist" on Netflix. Prior to watching it I read some reviews on IMDB and some people called it a very depressing movie. I did not find it to be such but it got me thinking about the unequivocally most depressing movie I have ever seen, which was "The Road" with Viggo Mortensen. Don't know how many have seen this but I would advise staying away from pills or guns for at least 48 hrs after watching it.
What's the most depressing movie you've ever seen?

I thought the movie was good, but the book was excellent. Even darker than the movie.

I've never been more depressed with a movie than I was when "Heidi" interrupted the final minute of the Jets/Raiders football game in 1968.

The Oakland Raiders score two touchdowns in nine seconds to beat the New York Jets--and no one saw it, because with just 65 seconds left to play, NBC switched off the game in favor of its previously scheduled programming, a made-for-TV version of the children’s story.

The other night I watched "The Machinist" on Netflix. Prior to watching it I read some reviews on IMDB and some people called it a very depressing movie. I did not find it to be such but it got me thinking about the unequivocally most depressing movie I have ever seen, which was "The Road" with Viggo Mortensen. Don't know how many have seen this but I would advise staying away from pills or guns for at least 48 hrs after watching it.
What's the most depressing movie you've ever seen?

I was a train a few years ago, sat reading 'The Road'. A complete stranger came and sat opposite me and said "That's the most depressing book I have ever read!". Yes, it is a dark and gloomy book but the setting and story does not lend it to be anything else. I enjoyed the book, the film less.

I've never been more depressed with a movie than I was when "Heidi" interrupted the final minute of the Jets/Raiders football game in 1968.

The Oakland Raiders score two touchdowns in nine seconds to beat the New York Jets--and no one saw it, because with just 65 seconds left to play, NBC switched off the game in favor of its previously scheduled programming, a made-for-TV version of the children’s story.